5 Remote Work Tips That Actually Fix Your Productivity

Quick answer: Stop forcing routines that don’t fit you. Instead, design a system around your energy peaks, physical space, and natural focus cycles. These five tips cut through the noise and give you real control over your remote work day.
Why Most "Remote Work Tips" Fail You
I’ve been a remote worker since 2016. I’ve lived in Austin, Lisbon, and Mexico City. I’ve worked from cafés, co-working spaces, and my tiny apartment. I’ve also burned out—twice. During those crashes, I realized something brutal: most productivity advice for remote workers is either too vague or too rigid. It assumes you have the same energy, space, and responsibilities as everyone else. That’s not how real life works.
The tips that actually stick are the ones that respect your biology, your environment, and your actual job demands. They’re not about forcing a 5 AM wake-up or a 9-to-5 schedule. They’re about building a system that works *with* you, not against you. Here are the five that changed my workflow—and the workflows of hundreds of readers who’ve tried them.
Tip 1: Schedule Deep Work Around Your Energy, Not Your Calendar
Deep work isn’t a luxury. It’s a necessity for remote workers who need to produce real output. But here’s the catch: deep work isn’t a fixed block of time. It’s a *moving target* that depends on your circadian rhythm, your sleep, and your mental load.
I learned this the hard way during my first burnout. I was trying to force deep work at 9 AM every day, like some productivity influencer told me to. But my brain was foggy until 11 AM. By then, I was already exhausted from answering emails and Slack messages. The result? I spent three hours staring at a screen, accomplishing nothing.
So I started tracking my energy. Not in a vague "I feel tired" way, but with a simple metric: when did I feel sharpest and most focused? For me, it’s usually between 10 AM and 1 PM. For others, it’s late at night. The key is to *protect that time like it’s a client meeting*. No emails. No meetings. Just one high-focus task.
How to make it work:
- Use a tool like Toggl Track or a simple spreadsheet to log your energy levels for a week. Rate your focus on a scale of 1-10 every hour.
- Block your top 2-3 hours of focus for deep work. Treat it like a non-negotiable appointment.
- If your peak focus time is inconsistent, try a 90-minute sprint method. Work for 90 minutes, rest for 20. Repeat. This aligns with your ultradian rhythms.
Data backs this up. A Stanford study found that multitasking reduces productivity by up to 40%. But when you align your deep work with your natural focus cycles, you’re not just avoiding multitasking—you’re *amplifying* your output.
Tip 2: Design Your Workspace for Your Brain, Not for Aesthetics
Your workspace isn’t just a place to sit. It’s a *tool* that either helps or hurts your productivity. And most remote workers get this wrong by prioritizing Instagram-worthy setups over functional ones.
I made this mistake when I moved to Lisbon. I spent weeks curating a "minimalist" desk with a sleek white chair, a marble desk, and a plant that died within a month. It looked great, but it was a nightmare to work from. The chair gave me back pain. The marble desk reflected glare. The plant wilted, and its death became a daily reminder of my failure to keep it alive.
After a month of frustration, I stripped it down. I got a standing desk, a monitor at eye level, and a chair that actually supported my spine. I moved the plant to a shelf where I couldn’t see it. Within a week, my back pain disappeared, and my focus improved. The difference wasn’t just physical—it was psychological.
How to make it work:
- Lighting is non-negotiable. Natural light is best, but if that’s not possible, use a daylight bulb (5000K-6500K) to reduce eye strain. Avoid overhead fluorescents—they cause glare and fatigue.
- Your chair matters more than your desk. A good chair supports your spine and reduces fatigue. If you’re on a budget, a $100 chair like the Hbada Ergonomic Office Chair is better than a $500 designer chair that hurts your back.
- Keep it boring. Your workspace should be free of distractions. No TV in the background. No laundry pile in sight. If you can see clutter, your brain will subconsciously process it as unfinished work.
A Harvard study found that poor lighting can reduce productivity by 15%. And a Cornell study showed that ergonomic improvements can reduce discomfort by up to 50% and increase productivity by 11%.
Tip 3: Use the "Two-Minute Rule" for Small Tasks—But With a Twist
The two-minute rule is simple: if a task takes less than two minutes, do it immediately. It’s a classic productivity hack, but most people apply it wrong. They use it as an excuse to procrastinate on bigger tasks by focusing on tiny, meaningless chores.
I fell into this trap when I first started working remotely. I’d spend 20 minutes organizing my inbox, replying to Slack messages, and tidying my desk—all while telling myself I was being productive. But at the end of the day, I hadn’t made progress on the *real* work that mattered.
The twist? Apply the two-minute rule only to tasks that are *truly* two minutes or less. If it’s going to take longer, schedule it for later. Use a tool like Todoist or TickTick to capture these tasks and batch them into a single 30-minute slot at the end of the day.
How to make it work:
- Set a timer. When a small task pops up, ask yourself: *Can I do this in two minutes?* If yes, do it now. If no, add it to your task list and move on.
- Batch similar tasks. Instead of scattering small tasks throughout the day, group them into one block. For example, spend 30 minutes at 4 PM replying to Slack messages, organizing files, and updating your calendar.
- Use the "5-Second Rule" for motivation. When you hesitate to do a small task, count down from 5 and just start. Mel Robbins’ 5-Second Rule works because it interrupts overthinking.
A Stanford study found that people who act immediately on small tasks are 20% more productive than those who delay them. But the key is *acting immediately*—not using the rule as a distraction.
Tip 4: Replace Meetings with Async Communication—But Set Boundaries
Meetings are the silent killer of remote work productivity. A Harvard Business Review study found that remote workers spend 15% more time in meetings than office workers—and that time often feels unproductive.
I hit this wall when I joined a fully remote team. We had back-to-back Zoom calls, and by 3 PM, I was exhausted. I couldn’t focus on deep work because my brain was fried from constant context-switching. So I started experimenting with async communication.
The shift wasn’t about eliminating meetings entirely. It was about *replacing* unnecessary ones with written updates and recorded videos. For example:
- Instead of a 30-minute stand-up meeting, we started sharing a 2-minute Loom video update each morning.
- Instead of a brainstorming session, we used a shared Google Doc where everyone could contribute ideas asynchronously.
- Instead of a weekly sync, we used a Slack thread where people could post updates at their own pace.
How to make it work:
- Set a meeting budget. Limit yourself to 2-3 meetings per week. Any more, and you’re wasting time.
- Use async tools. Tools like Loom for video updates, Notion for shared docs, and Slack threads for discussions can replace most meetings.
- Schedule "focus blocks" around meetings. If you *must* attend a meeting, block off 30 minutes before and after to recover and refocus. Meetings create cognitive load—your brain needs time to reset.
A McKinsey report found that companies that reduce meetings by 20% see a 15% increase in productivity. But the real win isn’t just fewer meetings—it’s *better communication*. Async updates force people to be concise and thoughtful.
Tip 5: Build a "Shutdown Ritual" to End Your Workday—Even If You Work Flexibly
Remote work blurs the lines between work and life. Without a clear shutdown ritual, it’s easy to keep checking emails, answering Slack messages, or thinking about work long after you’ve
